Just keepin tabs on the other side..

This is a discussion on Just keepin tabs on the other side.. within the The Second Amendment & Gun Legislation Discussion forums, part of the Related Topics category; feel free to do the opposite of what the anti-freedom VACPS request of their "friends" -- as I have
Don't know if this fits best ...

BREAKING: Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK) is attempting to attach a dangerous
amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act that would allow veterans
who have been declared mentally incompetent by the U.S. Department of
Veterans Affairs to own and purchase firearms.

Please call your U.S. Senators IMMEDIATELY at (202) 224-3121 and tell them
to oppose this amendment.

It is a sickening attempt by the National Rifle Association to sell guns
at the expense of the safety of veterans who are likely to be struggling
with depression. We know that there is already a huge increase in veteran
suicides and many instances of murder/suicide where family members are also
targeted. To pray on our vulnerable veterans for the sake of a few guns
sales is morally reprehensible.

Virginia and many other states already have systems in place to allow
these veterans to petition for restoration of their gun rights once they are
able to recover from their mental and emotional issues.

We can all help protect our vets and their families by stopping the Coburn
amendment from being included in this legislation.

I would rather die with good men than hide with cowardsIf you want to make God laugh, tell him your plans.
Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it whether it exists or not, diagnosing it incorrectly, and applying the wrong remedy."

I think that Sen. Coburn is right to raise the due process argument. The vet should have due process with the onus on the state to tie the diagnosis to the loss of right. And chief policy officer for Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, Tom Tarantino, makes a good point that "the current restrictions might even be a disincentive for veterans to seek needed treatment". The current policy is too broad a restrictive brush over an inanimate gun object. We owe our veterans their fair day in court.
The know-it-all's give so little support for doing right by our veterans that Sen Coburn is dropping his attempt to amend and says he'll fight it in veteran's bills instead of the major defense budget ($631 billion defense) bill for our military transitioning from war to peace.

Does anyone know if the VA has a process for when someone is "cured" / no linger a a danger to him/herself or to others -- such as VCDL was instrumental in getting established in Virginia?

There are about 9,000 vets added to the gun ban list every year for the last 14 years. There is an appeal process whereby a labeled veteran can bring new evidence or petition the VA for restoration of firearm rights (that should never have been taken) by proving absence of threat to public safety. This all smacks of a violation of principles of liberty for which our vets fought.